By the influence of
Elizabeth, the two months’ truce was continued until the month of April
in the succeeding year: neither of the factions, however, observed the
armistice very strictly, and many minor fortresses were taken and
recaptured on both sides.
In the mean time Kirkaldy, like a prudent soldier, was preparing for the
storm which he foresaw was sure to burst when the armistice ended. While
Morton was intriguing in England, and the regent was engaged in the west
country, he secretly enlisted a number of new soldiers; upon which a
royal proclamation was issued by sound of trumpet, on the 19th March,
warning them all, under pain of treason, to abandon the standard of this
desperate soldier, who prepared for a war against all Protestant
Scotland, and England too, the regent’s ally. Regardless of the mandate,
the new levies were, by beat of drum, assembled on the Castlehill by
Captain Melville, who formally arrayed, attested, and paid them, in the
name of Queen Mary.
On the 13th of April, the attention of the crowds who in the forenoon
promenaded the High Street and Lucken-booths was attracted by the
following paper, which Kirkaldy desired a gentleman of his garrison to
affix to the battlements of the ancient city cross: —
"To all and sundry nobles, barons, gentlemen, and other lieges
throughout the realm of Scotland.
“I, Sir William Kirkaldy of Grange, Knight, captain of the castle of
Edinburgh, make it manifest and declare, that forsaemeihle as Mathew
earl of Lennox, having unlawfully intruded himself in the regency of
this realm, hath lately caused publish sundry letters in divers burghs
of the same, full of calumnious, injurious, and untrue reports of me,
commanding and charging my friends, servants, and soldiers, levied for
the preservation of the said castle, to leave and abandon my service,
that he may the more easily surprise the castle, and thereby continue in
his detestable tyranny.....I have hazarded my life for Scotland when he
was against it; and if any gentleman undefamed, of my quality and
degree, of his faction and belonging to him, shall assert to the
contrary that I am a true Scottishman, I will say that he speaketh
untruelie, and lieth falsely in his throat; and I shall be ready to
fight him on horseback or on foot, at time and place to be appointed
according to the law of arms.—Proclaimed at the market-cross of
Edinburgh, 13th April 1571.” To this cartel, in which Lennox was taunted
with his former malpractices and exile, no answer was returned, and the
untouched gage of battle hung on the city cross till the wind blew it
away.
On the last day of the truce, the strong castle of Dunbarton was taken
by surprise by a party under Captain Crawford of Jordanhill. Lord
Fleming, by a boat, effected a narrow escape alone; his lady and
soldiers were made prisoners, together with the Archbishop (Hamilton) of
St Andrews, whom Lennox ruthlessly hanged over Stirling bridge.
Alarmed by the fall of this important fortress, Kirkaldy made every
possible preparation for a long and desperate defence. He repaired the
walls and towers of Edinburgh castle; mounted more cannon; every
prominence that might have assisted an escalade to ascend the cliffs was
carefully cut away, and the steep banks of the hill, under the guns of
the Spur, were carefully scarped and smoothed for the same purpose.
Mary, who kept up a secret intercourse with her supporters, sent him ten
thousand crowns: his brother, Sir James Kirkaldy, who was governor of
Blackness, had gone to France, where he disposed of certain valuable
jewels of the queen, and bought for her service “some murrions, corslets,
hagbuts, and wine, whilk were conveyit saiflie from Leyth by the
horsemen and soldiers of the town.” Sir William Kirkaldy broke into the
town-house, and carried off all the arms and armour of the citizens; he
next seized all the victual laid up in the stores of the Leith
merchants, and made strenuous exertions to endure a long blockade. His
preparations were conducted upon a scale never before witnessed in
Scotland; and he boasted of them in a long and rather clever ballad
published at the time. (Note G.)
In disciplining the new levies, he had recourse to an expedient that is
often adopted hy more recent tacticians,—a mock fight; which is quaintly
described by Calderwood and the gossiping journalists of the day.
In the afternoon of the 2d March, a party of his soldiers were marched
from the castle, which they again approached at eight in the evening;
and, having donned white English surcoats over their armour, "tuike upon
them to scarmis in manner of ane assault.” On approaching, they were
challenged from the ramparts of the Spur.
"Who are ye that trouble the captain in the silence of night?”
“The army of the Queen of England,” replied the mock assailants, with a
discharge from their harquebusses. They were promptly answered by a
blank volley from the walls; and while the firing continued, they
bestowed on each other all the scurrility and taunts which the Scots and
their southern neighbours used in battle as liberally as hard blows.
"Begone, ye lubbards! Away, Bluecoat!”
“I defy thee, Whitecoat!—dyrt upon your teith!— Hence knaves—to your
mistress—her soldiers shall not come here—we lat you to wit that we have
men, meat, and ordnance to last these seven years to cum.” The cannon
were then discharged, upon which the mock Englishmen took to flight
after an hour’s skirmish, which filled the peaceable portion of the
citizens with wonder and dismay.
“I could expound, if I chose, the mystery of these cannon-shots,” said
Knox, who, with two other clergymen, had been listening with
astonishment to the din and clamour; "yet this much will I say, ante
ruinam prceit fastus, as sayeth Solomon,—before destruction goeth pride.
I once saw as great bravadoers in the castle of St Andrews, and yet in a
few days they were brought low enough.” But Kirkaldy’s soldiers had soon
enough of more serious encounters, as the civil war had now commenced in
earnest.
Hearing of his great preparations, the regent became alarmed, and
ordered Ramsay and Hume, two of his captains, to beat up for recruits.
He furnished them with ample powers to impress those who would not
volunteer for King James; and, to enforce these arbitrary measures, they
were attended by two troops of a hundred and thirty lances.
On the sunny forenoon of a Sunday in May, these cavaliers, with their
horsemen, rode from Dalkeith, and passed the capital by the deep ravine
at the foot of Salisbury Craigs. They discharged several calivers in at
the eastern gate, and, after killing and wounding many citizens,
galloped to Leith untouched by the castle guns.
Kirkaldy resolved to avenge the insult; and, as they returned southward
next day, ordered fifty pikemen, and a hundred and fifty harquebusses,
with a body of armed citizens under the Earl of Huntly and Captain
Cullayne, to intercept and attack them. These came up with them a mile
distant from the city, near a ruined chapel of St John the Baptist,
among the fields at the east end of the extensive Boroughmuir, and a
brisk skirmish ensued amid the thatched cottages and green hedgerows of
a little hamlet called the Powburn. The king’s squadron of lances fought
gallantly, and drove hack Kirkaldy’s soldiers, who fought every rood of
the way, until they were close to the blackened ruins of the House and
Kirk of Field, the tall square tower and ivied buttresses of which
formed then a prominent object to the southward of the city. Huntly and
his band were driven headlong through the Potterrow Port, an arch
between two bastel houses; and there a captain named Moffat had a spear
driven through his body, as he was endeavouring to close the ponderous
barrier on the victors.
On this, Kirkaldy ordered a fresh band to sally forth, and these
compelled the king’s troopers to retire as fast as they had advanced;
but, on reaching the margin of the muir, once more they made a rally,
and a desperate charge—horse by horse with their levelled spears—and
freed themselves of the citizens, who retired in disorder, leaving their
slain behind them.
The Regent Lennox now issued a summons for the whole forces of the
kingdom to assemble at Linlithgow, on the 19th of May, while Morton
mustered a body of troops in and about his patrimonial castle of
Dalkeith; but the little influence possessed by the former is shown by
the small number who attended his standard.
On the arrival of the old Duke of Chatelherault, and his spirited son
Lord Claud Hamilton, with three hundred horse and seventy harquebussiers,
whom they marched up to the castle gate on the 4th May, Kirkaldy, and
the lords his companions, held a solemn council in the great hall.
Overlooking the almost perpendicular cliff to the south, this spacious
apartment exhibited features very different from those it possesses in
the present day. A massive iron grate occupied the ample fire-place at
one end; two great tables, and a dresser, or buffet, were its principal
furniture, while a chamber opening off it contained the amrie. Now it is
an hospital.
Indefatigable in the cause of Maiy, anxious hy energy and courage to
efface the memory of his former services against her, Kirkaldy still
continued the most vigorous preparations. He loopholed the spacious
vaults of the great cathedral, for the purpose of sweeping with musketry
its steep churchyard to the south, the broad Lawn-market to the west,
and High Street to the eastward; while his cannon from the spire
commanded the long line of street called the Canongate—even to the
battlements of the palace porch. He seized the ports of the city, placed
guards of his soldiers upon them, and retained the keys in his own
hands. He ordered a rampart and ditch to he formed at the Butter Tron,
for the additional defence of the castle ; and another for the same
purpose at the head of the West Bow, a steep and winding street of most
picturesque aspect. His soldiers pillaged the house of the regent, whose
movables and valuables they carried off; he broke into the Tolbooth and
council chamber, drove forth the scribes and councillors, and finally
deposed the whole bench of magistrates, installing in the civic chair
the daring chief of Femihirst, (who had now become the husband of his
daughter Janet, a young girl barely sixteen;) while a council composed
of his moss-trooping vassals, clad in their iron jacks, steel caps,
calivers, and two-handed whingers, officiated as bailies, in lieu of the
douce, paunchy, and well-fed burgesses of the Crainas and Luckenbooths.
Meanwhile, so great was the hatred of the queen’s party against Knox—her
most bitter and implacable enemy—that the situation of the preacher
became very critical, after Kirkaldy received the Hamiltons into the
city, and effected- so great a change in the administration of civic
affairs—a change which closed for ever the hearts of the citizens
against their former favourite. So intense was the animosity of the
Hamilton clan against the great Reformer, that his anxious friends
watched his house in the night, and even proposed to form a guard for
the defence of his person— a measure almost requisite in a city thronged
with the half-desperate soldiers of a ruined cause, and the ferocious
mosstroopers of the Border chieftains. Kirkaldy, actuated by a proper
spirit of duty, instantly interdicted the formation of a guard, but
offered to send his kinsman Captain Melville to conduct the venerable
Knox to and from church. Feeling interest in his safety, notwithstanding
their late quarrel, and influenced by the importunity of the citizens,
as much as by the innate generosity so natural to a brave man, he
applied to the Duke of Chatelherault, and the gentlemen of his house,
for a written protection for Knox. But they refused to pledge even their
words of honour for his safety ; alleging as a reason that u there were
many bold rascals among their retinue who loved him not, and might do
him harm without their knowledge.” Of that a serious instance occurred,
when the Reformer narrowly escaped the fate of martyrdom. The ball of a
caliver being one night shot through»his window, it lodged in the
ceiling of the apartment he occupied.1 Alarmed by this circumstance, the
very day after the Hamiltons entered Edinburgh he retired to St Andrews;
and, during his absence, many ridiculous stories, suited to the
superstition of the time, were circulated concerning him—that he had
gained the love of Margaret Stuart of Ochiltree by sorcery, and other
reports which honest Richard Bannatyne 'records with ludicrous
indignation. John Low, a carrier of letters to St Andrews, being in the
"Castell of Edinburgh, the Ladie Home would neids threip in his face,
that Johne Knox was banist the toune, because in his yard he had raisit
some sanctis, amangis whome their came up the devill with homes, which
when his servant Richart saw he ran wud, and so deid.”
By this time the brother of the secretary, John Maitland, had joined the
queen’s party. A loyal subject, and steady in his adherence to Mary, he
was appointed lord privy-seal in 1567, on his father’s resignation; but
now, that office having been given to the celebrated Buchanan, and his
commendatory of Coldingham to Home of Manderstone, and being sensible
that the regent was his enemy, he retired into the castle of Edinburgh,
where he was kindly received by the governor and Lady Grange.
Four days after Knox’s departure, the Earl of Morton and his troops,
having formed a junction with those of the regent, encamped at Leith,
and threw up a battery on the southern part of the Calton Hill, where a
bluff black precipice, then called the Doo Craig, or Pigeons Rock,
opposes itself to the city. This sconce they hoped would command the
Canongate and protect their parliament, which, that its proceedings
might be dated from the capital, sat around the cross of St John, in the
middle of the street; while a strong force under Crawford of Jordanhill
was drawn up between the place of meeting and the round towers of the
Netherbowport, (the Temple Bar of the city,) to prevent any sudden
sortie of the soldiers of Kirkaldy, who, to disturb this strange
Assembly of the Estates, fired eighty-seven shot of the heaviest calibre
from the eastern curtain. But the great strength and vast height of the
intervening houses protected the lords from this cannonade, which
otherwise would considerably have discomposed their proceedings.
Meanwhile the sconce on the Doo Craig continued to fire at the upper
part of the city; but was answered by a platform of guns erected at
Leith Wynd, where Boisin, a famous French corporal, and a soldier named
Kirkaldy, were slain. The latter had often danced on St Giles’s steeple,
exposed to the harquebusses of the foe—for dancing on dangerous and
exposed places was a favourite bravado of the martialists of those days,
when aims were less deadly than now.
King James’s parliament sat on the 24th May, and three succeeding days.
Sir William and Sir James Kirkaldy, Maitland of Lethington, his brother
the com-mendator, Gavin abbot of Kilwinning, Chatelherault, and all the
queen’s adherents, were again solemnly declared to be forfeited rebels
and traitors, after which the meeting broke up and retired. Immediately
upon this, Kirkaldy Calderwood, (Woodrow Society Edit.) sallied
forth, burnt their place of assembly, and destroyed several houses
belonging to them. On this occasion the ponderous Mons Meg was brought
from the castle by the Earl of Huntly, who fenced her round with
fascines and a gabionade, in the Blackfriars Yard; but so great were the
exertions required for dragging her, that the operation is said to have
cost “ two or three poore men their lyves.” Four-and-twenty of her
enormous stone bullets (each three hundredweight) were on this occasion
discharged in two hours and a half, against the mansion of a certain
obnoxious kingsman, John Lawson, whose household must have been
considerably disconcerted by such a cannonade!
“It is impossible,” observes Tytler, u to conceive a more miserable
spectacle than that presented at this moment by the Scottish capital:
the country tom and desolated by the straggles of two exasperated
factions, whose passions became every day more fierce and implacable, so
that the very children fought under the name of king’s and queen’s men;
the capital in a state of siege, whilst the wretched citizens, placed
between the fires of the castle and the camp of the regent, were
compelled to intermit their peaceful labours, and either to serve under
the queen’s banner, or to join Lennox and have their property
confiscated.” While the treacherous interposition of Elizabeth’s
ministry served but to make matters worse, “fanaticism added her horrors
to the war; and the .Reformed clergy, by a refusal to pray for the
queen, inflamed the resentment of her friends, and gave an example of
rancour to the people.”
All business was at an end, and all confidence between men had ceased;
the bells rang no more for public worship they tolled only the signal to
arms; and the ceaseless din of the artillery thundered above the
desolate capital from the dawn to the sunset of each long summer day.
Skirmishes and conflicts ensued daily, even hourly; and the citizens
soon learned, without emotion, to behold the dead and the dying home
through their guarded harriers.
One morning in May, Sir Thomas of Fernihirst, the interim provost, with
the Lords Lochinvar and Herries, two hundred lances, and one hundred and
twenty harquebussiers, marched out by the long straggling street of the
West Port; and, passing the chapel of the Virgin, made a circuit round
the castle, and engaged a hand of the regent’s soldiers near the loch at
the ancient village of Canonmills. The castle batteries opened to cover
their advance — the shot came booming over the waving corn-fields;
several of the king’s men were slain, and Sir Arthur of Myrrin-toun was
run through by a lance at Fernihirst’s side.
It was a common bravado of the cavaliers of Lennox, to gallop their
horses to and fro on a level park called Halkerston’s croft, near the
castle, firing their petronels and brandishing their weapons, while
exclaiming,—
“Traytouris to God and man, come forth and break a spear!” A cannon-ball
was the usual reward of this “pricking on the fields.”
Once a party of glittering horsemen were seen caracoling their chargers
near the old hamlet of Broughton, and waving handkerchiefs from the
points of their brandished swords, as a defiance to the castle; Kirkaldy
ordered a culverin to be discharged against them, and though fully a
mile distant, one well-directed shot slew Henry Stuart lord Methven, and
seven troopers. |